Hungarian law gives green light to South Stream in defiance of EU

Shareholders and partners of Gazprom's project sign on the first pipe abut during the launching ceremony of South Stream gas pipeline construction. (RIA Novosti/Ramil Sitdikov) / RIA Novosti

The Hungarian parliament has approved a law on Monday which allows building the South Stream gas pipeline without approval of the European Union. The European Commission has already demanded an explanation from Hungarian authorities.

The European Commission’s spokesperson said at a press briefing
in Brussels on Tuesday that the EC was in contact with Hungarian
authorities to get an explanation for their decision.

The law was passed with 132 votes in favor and 35 votes against,
allowing a company to construct a gas pipeline even if it doesn’t
have the licenses needed to operate it. According to the new law
the only requirement for a company which wants to take part in
construction is approval from the Hungarian Energy Office.

“This is meant to give a boost to South Stream and is to show
Russia that Hungary is taking the project seriously,” Attila
Holoda, an expert on energy regulation, said as cited by
Bloomberg.

South Stream is “extraordinarily important” for Hungary
because it enhances the security of gas supplies to the country,
Janos Lazar, the Minister in Charge of the Prime Minister’s
Office, told reporters on October, 22.

The South Stream gas pipeline was projected to deliver gas to
south and central Europe via the Black Sea and the Balkans,
bypassing Ukraine. The project, with a capacity of 63 billion
cubic meters of gas a year, is seen as critical for European
energy security. Ukraine has been an unreliable transit country,
and building a new pipeline is could result in avoiding numerous
risks.

The South Stream would run across Bulgaria, Serbia, Hungary,
Austria, and Slovenia before entering Italy and Greece. The
crisis in Ukraine has made the South Stream project a political
issue rather than a legal debate. The EU Commission has been
pressuring member states to stop the building of the pipeline.
Last year it started an investigation claiming the project
contradicted the European Union's Third Energy Package
regulations.

Bulgaria and Austria
have temporarily suspended the project but are leaving it on the
table.